The Land :: www.TheLandOnline.com

Economy/Tech

February 12, 2010

Rural unemployment declined throughout 2009

Originally published in the February 5, 2010, print edition.

Although unemployment has reached new heights nationally it has been declining steadily in many rural counties since early last year.

As an example, unemployment peaked in Todd County in February 2009 at 11.7 percent, according to the state of Minnesota. It has declined steadily since then. In October the unemployment rate in Todd County was 7.4 percent. That is actually two-tenths of a percent lower than the state’s 7.6 percent unemployment rate at the end of October. Although national unemployment is now 10 percent, it was 10.2 percent at the end of October.

The central Minnesota counties neighboring Todd County have also experienced substantial declines in the unemployment rate. Wadena County peaked at 13.6 percent in March 2009. By October the Wadena County rate was down more than 5 percent to 8.4 percent.

With 9 percent of its work force unemployed in October, Morrison County had the highest unemployment rate in the area. But that is substantially lower than the 14.6 percent unemployment rate in Morrison County at the end of March.

South of Todd and Morrison, in Stearns County, only 6.5 percent of workers were unemployed in October whereas 9.5 percent of them had no work in March.

Douglas County, where Alexandria is located, had an October unemployment rate of 5.4 percent. It was the lowest in the area. Douglas County had a peak of 8.3 percent of its workers unemployed in February 2009.

The trend in higher percentages of the work force having employment as 2009 progressed is not limited to rural central Minnesota counties. Of seven counties examined all had unemployment that peaked between the months of January through March 2009.

All of those counties — Norman and Kittson in the northwest, Lac qui Parle, Chippewa and Lyon in the southwest, Houston in the southeast and Brown in the south central — had a lower percentage of workers in October than at their peak of unemployment. Chippewa County had the lowest percentage of decline between its 9.8 percent unemployment in January 2009 and October’s 6.7 percent. Chippewa is also the only county that showed more of its workers unemployed in October than were unemployed in September.

With the possible exception of Chippewa County, it appears that unemployment in Minnesota’s rural counties is in a steady decline.

Many rural counties also have lower unemployment percentages than the state of Minnesota as a whole. High unemployment in urban counties such as Hennepin and St. Louis bring the state average up. Unemployment numbers peaked in both counties in June. By October St. Louis was down to 7.7 percent unemployed workers and Hennepin was at 7.0 percent. That is higher than all but three of the 12 rural counties whose statistics were examined.

Carol Anderson, executive director of Community Development of Morrison County, in Little Falls, said there are likely a number of reasons for rural Minnesota’s improving unemployment numbers.

“Rural banks are generally locally owned and they tend to be more conservative than the large national banks,” she said, noting that generally, conservative banks translate into a conservative, and healthy, small business community.

Anderson also believes the economic stimulus money has had a positive impact in rural counties, as has an improving stock market.

“There is more confidence now,” she said.

State records show that January is historically the worst month for employment in many rural counties. History could repeat itself as the new year begins if a mid-December lay off of printing workers at R.R. Donnelley in Todd County is any indication. However, history also shows employment improves as the year goes on.

Text Only
Economy/Tech
  • Calculating CRC or RA-HP crop insurance payments Farm Programs: Crop insurance considerations as varied as available options

    The level of insurance coverage can result in some producers receiving crop insurance indemnity payments, while other producers receive no indemnity payments, even though both producers had the same guarantee and the same final yield.

    October 22, 2010 2 Photos

  • Rick Rugg Robotic milking lets cows produce on own schedule

    Did you ever wonder how often a cow would like to be milked if she could set the schedule? Probably not. You likely have other questions to ponder. But the answer to this vexing question is 2.7 to 3.2 times within a 24-hour period.

    June 18, 2010 1 Photo

  • Alan Guebert Farm and Food File: Trade talks stuck in past

    The surest way to confirm if anyone in Washington, D.C. is telling you the truth about trade is to watch their lips: if they move, they're stretching the blanket one way or the other.

    June 18, 2010 1 Photo

  • Kent Thiesse Farm Programs: Biofuels industry hangs on words of Congress, EPA

    Future development and expansion of the biofuels industry, particularly the ethanol industry, could be in trouble, if Congress and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency continue to delay ethanol blends beyond the current maximum of 10 percent in the United States.

    June 18, 2010 1 Photo

  • Scott Knutson - Farmer, inventor, small businessman

    What farmer hasn't created something to make his work easier? Usually he keeps his labor-saving device a secret, but Scott Knutson, a wheat, soybean and sugar beet farmer from the Crookston area, markets his inventions.

    June 4, 2010

  • Alan Guebert Farm and Food File: Suppose you support farm bill reform; it could be cheaper

    Suppose the House ag committee asks you to come to Washington to offer your ideas on how to improve the farm bill for its 2012 update.

    June 4, 2010 1 Photo

  • Warren Formo Water, water everywhere -- Protecting agriculture's lifeline

    With 10,000-plus lakes, the headwaters of the mighty Mississippi River, the large watershed of the Minnesota River and hundreds of lesser watersheds across the state, water is a daily ingredient in the life of Minnesota citizens. Zero in on Minnesota agriculture, and water is the life of the entire industry.

    May 21, 2010 1 Photo

  • Electricity used to control dust in livestock barns Electricity used to control dust in livestock barns

    "The EPI system is an easy, low-cost and highly reliable process for quickly improving the environment of any confinement housing facility."

    May 21, 2010 1 Photo

  • Commentary: So-called efficiencies creating 'ag disconnect'

    "If we as eaters insist on food being a smaller and smaller percentage of our spendable income by continuing to separate ourselves from the source of that food, it will become a race to the bottom for agriculture, for rural communities, and for everyone's quality of life."

    May 21, 2010

  • Kent Thiesse Farm Programs: Sign-up deadline for 2010 ACRE program June 1

    Farm operators and land owners have until June 1 to sign-up for the ACRE program at county Farm Service Agency offices. Even if producers do not plan to enroll in the ACRE program, they need to enroll in the 2010 Direct and Counter-Cyclical Payment farm program by June 1 at their county FSA office, in order to receive their 2010 direct payments on eligible crops.

    April 29, 2010 2 Photos